26 September 2011
Introduction to ASL
Writing Assignment
American Sign Language
|Noun: A form of sign language developed in the US for the use of people who are deaf, consisting of over 4,000 signs. |
|American Sign Language is a very useful way of communicating amongst people who are deaf. A common misconception among people is that they |
|think that sign language is universal and that people in every country sign the same way. Sign Language is not universally the same. Most |
|countries have their own Sign Language or share a given Sign Language with a different dialect. Sign Language is not just an alphabet where |
|you have to sign each letter of the word you are trying …show more content…
It's rarely required to spell a word because no sign exist. For example names and surnames are often |
|spelled. The alphabet can serve as a great starting point to learn Sign Language. The grammar differs from the written English. When |
|questions are formed, the arrangement of the words is different, that it would be as if you were speaking the language. For example, in |
|English, you as someone, how are you? When signing this, you have to ask, you how? With sign language, people are still able to express |
|thoughts and feelings on philosophy, literature, or politics as football, cars or income taxes. Using sign language, people are also able to |
|express poetry as well as someone who uses English verbally. As well as in other languages, new vocabulary and words are being thought of by |
|people as a reaction to the way society around us changes. |
|American Sign Language has been developed by deaf people themselves who wanted to have their own way of communicating with each other. In |
|1817, Laurent Clerc and Thomas H. Gallaudet established the first school for the deaf in Connecticut. Usually in school, signs were not